The retail apocalypse has officially descended on America

Hire better people. Refuse to hire surly people, refuse to hire morons.

EEO/quotas........


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This fine person must be given equal value in your hearing aid store;

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And these fine folks may scream racism if you don't hire them in your pew manufacturing business;

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I have great products and great prices and will continue to prosper . I sell nothing on the net .
 
Our temperaments have definitely changed, quantifiably, and this is one of the manifestations. People are less social. More loners. Tons of factors that have caused this -- interstate highway system, higher education serving as a siphon to suck talent out of towns and into metros, a massive incoming peasant migration from places with very, very alien cultures, and government policies actively destroying and subsuming the role of family and church. All of which adds up to the reality that: Today, you probably do not relate to and share lots in common with your immediate neighbors. You feel no particular affinity towards them. You are a stranger on your own street. You don't have a shared life experience. You don't wake up at the same time in the morning and walk to the same job. You don't have barbecues together. Your kids don't walk to and from school together. You don't see each other at church every week.

You have a closer emotional connection with Conan O-Brien and the characters in the Game of Thrones than you do with anyone whose house you can see out your window. Far closer.

This is a bizarre situation, precedented by previous civilization collapses, but probably never to this extent. People don't like going out. Even to go shopping. When they are out they're on their geejaw. People are recluses. Non-social and anti-social. It's introversion rigorized and systematized.

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We are social...just differently social. Thank the interwebs. We can stop being social by hitting the escape key. Not so easy to escape your busy body neighbor. Going shopping where I live, in the middle of a large city, involves traffic and having to be on your guard. Not to mention having to deal with crowds. So yeah..it's a trade off. That being said, the malls here are okay for now, although they are giving way to the outdoor shopping/entertainment centers.
 
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I have great products and great prices and will continue to prosper . I sell nothing on the net .

My product is me, my price is a steal. I sell nothing on the internet either. I am, however, thinking in another 20 yrs. I might have to try a different approach.
 
Sears and Kmart also had auto shops. Amazon can't cover that.
Auto repair places and dealers are doing fine, sales and revenue wise.

The problem affecting Sears and Kmart isn't 'the retail apocalypse.' It's that nobody likes Sears and Kmart. They failed to adapt, and they're paying for it. Nobody calls Radio Shack's bankruptcies 'the electronic apocalypse' or assumes that sales of electronics are down because Radio Shack is doing poorly.
 
I really prefer kmart to walmarx

I always liked it better. Mostly because it was easier and quicker to get in and out . We no longer have Sears and Kmart nearby . I do not really use walmart, worst service ever.
 
Auto repair places and dealers are doing fine, sales and revenue wise.

The problem affecting Sears and Kmart isn't 'the retail apocalypse.' It's that nobody likes Sears and Kmart. They failed to adapt, and they're paying for it. Nobody calls Radio Shack's bankruptcies 'the electronic apocalypse' or assumes that sales of electronics are down because Radio Shack is doing poorly.

I used to buy some auto parts stocks . Always figured it would fair better than most in recessions .
 
Always figured it would fair better than most in recessions .

Depends. The problem now is that warranties are longer and a lot of people don't keep their cars beyond the term of the warranty. I think the population that's actually working on their cars and getting them fixed at non-dealership places (Firestone, local shops, etc.) is smaller than it used to be. Means the dealers hold on to a lot more business.
 
Auto repair places and dealers are doing fine, sales and revenue wise.

The problem affecting Sears and Kmart isn't 'the retail apocalypse.' It's that nobody likes Sears and Kmart.

That's too simplistic. You can say "nobody likes Sears and Kmart" (which have lost 700 stores in recent years), but did nobody also like Montgomery Wards (500 store closures), B. Dalton (800 store closures), Mervyn's (200 store closures), Waldenbooks (1,200 store closures), Goody's (500 store closures), Borders (625 store closures), JCPenney (140 store closures), Hastings Entertainment (150 store closures), Gap (190 stores), Radio Shack (3,000 store closures), Crown Books (200 store closures), Macy's (100 store closures), Payless (500 store closures), and thousands of other chain retail outlets that have shuttered in the US? You can't lose that many retail stores in one country and expect the economy to somehow recover; Macy's alone will lay off 38,000 employees this year. These massive retail die-offs, which have grown larger and larger since 2001, often have little to do with what people like and don't like. They're forced out of business by our own government, which is using taxpayer money to contract with Amazon for $600,000,000. That's money that Amazon then uses to put more retailers out of business. Our money.

The more people listen to the talking heads saying these establishments "failed to adapt" while ignoring the fact that our own government is a major patron of Amazon's massive profit mechanism, the more we'll continue to see once-massive retailers go bankrupt, and continue to see our own neighborhoods decline as brick-and-mortar stores become history.
 
That's too simplistic. You can say "nobody likes Sears and Kmart" (which have lost 700 stores in recent years), but did nobody also like Montgomery Wards (500 store closures), B. Dalton (800 store closures), Mervyn's (200 store closures), Waldenbooks (1,200 store closures), Goody's (500 store closures), Borders (625 store closures), JCPenney (140 store closures), Hastings Entertainment (150 store closures), Gap (190 stores), Radio Shack (3,000 store closures), Crown Books (200 store closures), Macy's (100 store closures), Payless (500 store closures), and thousands of other chain retail outlets that have shuttered in the US?

Ask any person under 30 which of those stores they have or would shop at given the opportunity.
 
Ask any person under 30 which of those stores they have or would shop at given the opportunity.

You mean prior to Amazon and smartphones?

Let's be real, shall we? People in their 20's aren't known for the ability to not be led around by the latest fad/peer pressure/brainwashing trend put out by the controlled media with the intention of promoting CIA-controlled corporations (looking at you, Bezos and Zuckerberg). People in their 20's generally do what is popular and easiest, not necessarily what is in their best interest.
 
Ask any person under 30 which of those stores they have or would shop at given the opportunity.

The point he was making is how many of those youngsters would have worked in those establishments.

Now if they're lucky they can flip burgers during HS/college...
 
You mean prior to Amazon and smartphones?

Let's be real, shall we? People in their 20's aren't known for the ability to not be led around by the latest fad/peer pressure/brainwashing trend put out by the controlled media with the intention of promoting CIA-controlled corporations (looking at you, Bezos and Zuckerberg). People in their 20's generally do what is popular and easiest, not necessarily what is in their best interest.

It is about getting laid. :cool:
 
You mean prior to Amazon and smartphones?

No, I said under 30.

Let's be real, shall we? People in their 20's aren't known for the ability to not be led around by the latest fad/peer pressure/brainwashing trend put out by the controlled media with the intention of promoting CIA-controlled corporations (looking at you, Bezos and Zuckerberg). People in their 20's generally do what is popular and easiest, not necessarily what is in their best interest.
If you get all riled up and the nurses have to come talk to you then you won't be getting any jello with your meal.
 
The point he was making is how many of those youngsters would have worked in those establishments.
Shopping centers with a greater number of smaller stores employ more people, not less, than giant malls comprised of huge department stores.
 
Shopping centers with a greater number of smaller stores employ more people, not less, than giant malls comprised of huge department stores.

I must have missed where there's a booming of small stores opening up, especially ones that employ youngsters....
 
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